Categories
Philosophy

Pepper: softly spoken lies

There is a line in Pepper by the Butthole Surfers that lands almost casually: you never know just how you look through other people’s eyes. The song drifts through arbitrary violence, strange lives, and unresolved fragments, people moving through events that feel coherent from within but unsettling from outside. That line shifts the frame. It […]

Categories
Philosophy

Revolutionary Phase

A system optimised for speed and extraction can be disempowered not by rupture, but by altering the timing and pathways through which it expects to operate. In a parallel timeline, change did not arrive as rupture but as reconfiguration within the platforms and infrastructures that organised collective behaviour, where optimisation systems once tuned for engagement, […]

Categories
cybernetics Peace

Peace is a Managed Service

Peace isn’t some prize at the end of history. It’s not a flag, not a speech, not a deal signed under bright lights with everyone pretending they meant it. It’s a job. A quiet, ongoing, unglamorous job. You run it or it fails. That’s it. It lives in the tension people can tolerate without turning […]

Categories
Philosophy

Barnaby’s Choice

Reports today have drawn attention to remarks by Barnaby Joyce comparing immigration flows to livestock management, a framing criticised for both its tone and its implications. Whatever the intent, language of that kind lands heavily in a moment already charged around migration, borders, and identity. It reduces a complex human process to something blunt, and […]

Categories
systems

U.S. Tourism Decline

There are early signs that international tourism to the United States is softening: fewer arrivals, reduced forward bookings, and growing concern about border processing and entry conditions. Political uncertainty, stricter enforcement, longer processing times, and wider geopolitical tension are converging at a single operational point, the border itself, where travellers form a judgement about what […]

Categories
cybernetics

Complex War: Signal, Conflict, and the Collapse of Resolution

The current conflict involving Iran is not a single discrete event but an escalation within an already coupled regional system. Tensions between Iran, Israel, and aligned actors have intensified through reciprocal strikes, proxy involvement, and pressure on infrastructure and logistics networks across the Middle East. What appears as sudden escalation can be understood more clearly […]

Categories
politics

One Nation, One Idea: Immigration Insecurity in Australia

One Nation’s resurgence is real, but its diagnosis is false. In South Australia, recent results show a marked rise in support for One Nation, reshaping parts of the electoral landscape and prompting responses from major parties. The party’s core claim is simple. Migration is presented as a primary driver of housing stress, wage pressure, and […]

Categories
cybernetics

The Fool, the Follower, and the Systems That Make Them

Large populations have, at various points in history, rallied behind loud, simple, certainty-projecting figures who promise restoration, strength, or clarity amid confusion, even as those same movements steadily erode the very conditions upon which stability and shared reality depend, the quiet alignment between what people say, what they do, and what the world allows to […]

Categories
Complexity cybernetics environment

Beyond Eden: Climate, Complexity, Consequence

Anything we call a system is defined through relation, not contained within itself. Ice sheets, forests, oceans, atmospheric flows, monsoons. These are not isolated components but coupled processes that stabilise one another through ongoing exchange. The jet stream carries heat that shapes ice. Ice reflects light that shapes temperature. Forests regulate moisture that feeds rainfall. […]

Categories
communication cybernetics politics

Failure Mode: How Politics Lost Its Groove

Politics is not failing because people have become irrational; it is failing because the systems that coordinate perception, timing, and response have slipped out of phase, and what we are experiencing as conflict, populism, volatility, and institutional drift is the visible surface of a deeper timing problem in large-scale communication systems, one that also describes […]

Categories
communication cybernetics politics

It is not about politics

Across many countries, the current wave of populism looks like a political shift. It is, but it is also something deeper: a change in how communication systems select and stabilise meaning. Large, networked media environments now operate at high speed, uneven timing, and massive scale. In those conditions, not every idea travels equally. Some forms—short, […]

Categories
cybernetics

The Structural Risk of Technological Acceleration: Why Delay, Feedback, and Time Still Govern Complex Systems

Yesterday, sitting with a coffee, I fell into conversation with a group of photography students. It occurred to me that photography, particularly digital photography, is a curious artefact. It feels modern, yet in an important sense it belongs to a slower world, a medium that still obliges attention to pause between perception and interpretation. Consider […]